Epidemics

Ever wonder why several of your ancestors died at about the same time?
Maybe it was due to one of the epidemics listed below.


1657 Boston Measles 

1687 Boston Measles 

1690 New York Yellow Fever 

1713 Boston Measles 

1729 Boston Measles 

1732-3 Worldwide Influenza 

1738 South Carolina Smallpox 

1739-40 Boston Measles 

1747 CT, NY, PA, SC Measles 

1759 N. America Measles: areas inhabited by white people 

1761 N. America and

West Indies Influenza 

1772 N. America Measles 

1775 N. America Unknown epidemic: especially hard in NE 

1775-6 Worldwide Influenza: one of the worst epidemics 

1783 Dover, DE "Extremely fatal" bilious disorder 

1788 Philadelphia and New York Measles 

1793 Vermont A "putrid" fever and Influenza 

1793 Virginia

 Influenza: killed 500 in 5 counties in 4 weeks 

1793 Philadelphia Yellow Fever: over 4,000 deaths 

1793 Harrisburg, PA Many unexplained deaths 

1793 Middletown, PA Many unexplained deaths 

1794 Philadelphia, PA Yellow Fever 

1796-7 Philadelphia, PA Yellow Fever 

1798 Philadelphia, PA Yellow Fever: one of the worst 

1803 New York Yellow Fever 

1820-3 Nationwide "Fever" - started Schuylkill River and spread 

1822 New York and New Orleans Yellow Fever 

1831-2 Nationwide Asiatic Cholera: brought by English emigrants 

1832 NY City and other major cities Cholera 

1832 New Orleans Asiatic Cholera: over 1,000 deaths 

1832 Ayrshire towns of Stevenston, Dalry and Kilbride Cholera 

1833 Columbus, OH Cholera 

1834 New York City Cholera 

1837 Philadelphia Typhus 

1841 Nationwide Yellow Fever: especially severe in the south 

1847 New Orleans Yellow Fever 

1847-8 Worldwide Influenza 

1848-9 North America Cholera 

1849 New York Cholera 

1849-50 New Orleans Cholera: 3,000 deaths 

1850 Nationwide Yellow Fever 

1850 Alabama, New York Cholera 

1850-1 North America Influenza 

1851 Coles Co., IL, The Great Plains,

and Missouri Cholera 

1852 Nationwide Yellow Fever 

1853 New Orleans Yellow Fever: 8,000 die 

1855 Nationwide Yellow Fever 

1857-9 Worldwide Influenza: one of the greatest epidemics 

1860-1 Pennsylvania Smallpox 

1865-73 Philadelphia, NY,

Boston, New Orleans,

Baltimore, Memphis,

Washington DC Smallpox, a series of recurring epidemics of Cholera, Typhus, Typhoid, Scarlet Fever, Yellow Fever 

1873-5 N. America and Europe Influenza 

1878 New Orleans Yellow Fever: last great epidemic 

1878 Memphis, TN Yellow Fever 

1885 Chicago, IL water-borne disease 

1885 Plymouth, PA Typhoid 

1886 Jacksonville, FL Yellow Fever 

1900 Galveston, TX cholera 

1902 Alaska measles 

1905 New Orleans Yellow Fever: last US outbreak 

1918 Worldwide [high point yr] Influenza: more people were hospitalized in WWI from this epidemic than wounds. US Army training camps became death camps, with 80% death rate in some camps 

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